Samara Gill takes a sideways look at the week’s shocking news and shares her own unique perspective on how to fix Britain.
Britain’s migrant crisis isn’t some abstract story playing out in Westminster, it’s hitting our towns, our streets, our communities and Brits are feeling it.
Take Dover. The gateway to the nation. Families there watch dinghies arrive day after day, with hundreds of young men stepping onto the beach as if it’s an open door, while locals struggle to see a GP or find a school place for their kids.
Move north to Rotherham. A town already scarred by grooming scandals. Locals there feel abandoned, left wondering whether lessons were ever learned, while new pressures on housing and policing pile up.
Look at Bournemouth, one of Britain’s most famous seaside resorts. Three top hotels just yards from the golden beach are now being used to house migrants.
And in Portsmouth, locals are up in arms after it emerged asylum seekers are being offered 40% off beach huts on the seafront. Families who’ve lived there all their lives and scrimped and saved just to afford a few days by the sea are told to pay full price, while new arrivals get cut price deals. For many, it feels like classic two-tier Britain: locals footing the bill, while the perks go to those who’ve only just landed.
Let’s be clear: Britain has always welcomed those in need. But what we are seeing now is not compassion, it’s chaos. It’s not fairness, it’s failure! A system so broken that people who break the rules get rewarded, while law-abiding citizens are left at the back of the queue for housing, healthcare, and help!
If Britain cannot control its borders, it cannot protect its people. And if it cannot protect its people, it ceases to be Britain at all.
Credit to : TalkTV